Richard Edward Rainwater, born on June 15, 1944 and died September 27, 2015, he was an American investor and fund manager.
Richard made a significant personal fortune from his investments and was in the top 1000 richest people in the world in 2010.
He saw the peak oil phenomenon as a grave threat after reading Beyond the Limits and from the beginning of the 1990s invested heavily in oil.
Richard had a rare neurodegenerative disease, progressive supranuclear palsy, from 2009 until his death in 2015.
The son of a wholesale grocer, he grew up in Fort Worth, Texas.
He graduated from the University of Texas at Austin with a degree in mathematics, where he was a member of the Tau chapter of the Kappa Sigma fraternity.
Richard was recognized by the national organization in 1996 as Kappa Sigma Man of the Year.
After graduation, he went on to earn a 1968 MBA from Stanford Business School.
After business school, Richard landed a job as an investment banker, but soon accepted an invitation from former Stanford classmate Sid Bass to manage and diversify the Bass family portfolio.
Richard became the chief financial architect for the Bass family investments.
He was given $5 million to invest during his first year and managed to lose it all.
Richard then sought a more methodical investment strategy by speaking to investors like Warren Buffett and Charles Allen, Jr., while studying the work of Benjamin Graham and David Dodd.
After that debacle, Richard sought advice on more qualitative investing and his investments began to take off, according to “Wall Street’s Best-kept Secret,” a cover story that appeared in the October 20, 1986 issue of Business Week.
Richard eventually transformed the Bass family fortune into $5 billion.
He is reported to have amassed $100 million for himself during that period, which he later used as seed money for his own fund.
Richard had been an independent investor since 1986, investing in more than 30 companies and purchasing over 32 million square feet of office space across the country with concentrations in Houston, Dallas, Austin, and Denver.
Fortune magazine described his investing style as “analytically rigorous but opportunistic and Texas-sized in its audacity.”
He founded or co-founded firms including ENSCO International, an oil field service and offshore drilling company, in 1986; Columbia Hospital Corporation in 1988; Mid Ocean Limited, a provider of casualty re-insurance, in 1992; Crescent Real Estate Equities, Inc. in 1994; and Pioneer Natural Resources in 1997.
In 2010, he was awarded the Arbuckle Award at Stanford, where he received a MBA in 1968.
In accepting the award, he credited his mother with giving him people skills that had an enormous effect on his business and deal making success.